In the end, the shire is a triumph of British empiricism: a system so durable that it survived being formally abolished. It persists because it answers a deep human need for a place that is neither the suffocating village nor the anonymous nation, but the middle landscape —a home of accountable size. To understand the shire is to understand that in Britain, geography is never just geography. It is history, law, poetry, and rebellion, all folded into a line on a map that refuses to fade.
This was the beginning of the palimpsest. The ancient shire became a geographic county —a cultural reference, not a governing reality. Then came the , implemented in 1974, which gutted the historic counties. It created new "metropolitan counties" (Greater Manchester, Merseyside, West Midlands) and abolished others (Rutland was absorbed into Leicestershire; Huntingdonshire into Cambridgeshire). For a generation, the shires were officially dead. V. The Ghost and the Flame: Revival and Ceremony But the dead have a way of returning. Popular resistance to the 1974 reforms was ferocious. Postal addresses continued using historic county names. The Lieutenancies Act 1997 revived the shires for ceremonial purposes—each shire retains a Lord-Lieutenant, the monarch’s representative. In 1997, Rutland was re-established as a unitary authority. Huntingdonshire’s name remains on district council signs.
Today, the United Kingdom contains 39 historic counties (England), 13 historic counties (Wales), 34 shires (Scotland, where they are called "counties" but function similarly), and 6 counties (Northern Ireland). Yet only some are "administrative shires"—non-metropolitan counties like , Northumberland , and Oxfordshire that still have county councils. Others, like Middlesex , survive only in postal addresses, cricket clubs, and the stubborn memory of the elderly. VI. The Deep Meaning: Why the Shire Persists Why does this archaic unit still grip the British imagination? Because the shire offers what modernity destroys: a bounded comprehensibility . In a world of global flows and abstract regions, the shire is human-scale. It is the territory you could traverse in a day on horseback or by bicycle. It is the scale of the local newspaper, the hunt, the farmers’ market, the rivalry between "north" and "south" of the county.